Global Research: Centre for Research on Globalization Nov. 10, 2008
Against all odds, American voters
have elected a mixed-race, multi-cultural young man, who was born in modest
circumstances, as their president to lead them through an economic and military
crisis that threatens the future of their democracy.
Barack Obama campaigned on a
platform of “Change”; however, the fact of his election proves that America has
already changed.
I was born in my grandmother’s
farmhouse in West Texas almost 68 years ago, and my father often said every
American boy had a chance to be president, but I’m certain he never imagined
the boy could be black.
I was cared for by a middle-aged
African-American woman named Ora, and her husband, Tom, worked in our
fields. I don’t recall where they
lived, but it was probably in one of the barns. I do remember my father coming in the house one day to get
his shotgun. He was angry because
Tom had “talked back” to him, but my mother restrained him and the couple moved
away.
I started to school when I was five
years old after my mother died, and our school bus passed by the Bradford
Colored School, a small frame building at the end of a dirt road in a cotton
field.
My 1954 school yearbook has a group
picture of the Bradford students on the last page. There were 23 of them, and one tall boy stood off to one
side. “Charles” is handwritten
above his face; however, I have no memory of him or how he came to sign my
book. There is also a photograph
of his teacher: Mrs. Marjorie Thomas, a pleasant-looking young African-American
woman with a B.S. degree from Texas College.
My father died when I was ten years
old and a couple of years later I began to run away from home. I was finally arrested and taken before
a judge who “allowed” me to attend the New Mexico Military Institute instead of
being confined at the Gatesville State School for Boys. Racial segregation had been ruled
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1954; however, there are no black
faces in my 1958 yearbook.
I enlisted in the Navy after graduation
and, even though President Truman had ordered desegregation of the military ten
years earlier, there was only one African-American in my recruit class. At the time, most blacks served as
cooks and stewards, and there were none in my Hospital Corps training school.
I was assigned to the San Diego Navy
Hospital and was working as a senior corpsman on the chest wards in 1960 when a
young African-American patient was diagnosed with lung cancer. His condition rapidly deteriorated and
he was moved to a room where his young wife could spend time with him in
private. I do not recall his name,
but I vividly remember holding his hand as he struggled to breathe... and died.
Under Navy tradition, the body of a
deceased sailor is escorted by someone who served with him. The young man’s wife requested me to
accompany her to their home in the South and to attend the funeral; however, an
officer strongly “suggested” I decline because my presence might make his
family feel “uncomfortable.”
Whether it was acquiescence to authority or unquestioned acceptance of de facto segregation, I have always
regretted giving in to the pressure.
From time to time during the past 50
years, I have thought about Charles and the young widow who honored me by her
request and whom I disrespected with my refusal. The other night as I watched on television as 240,000 people
gathered in Chicago to celebrate the election of Barack Obama, I again wondered
what ever happened to these two people from my past. I decided to try to find out.
The only way I will ever locate the
widow is if she reads this and contacts me; however, the Texas College Alumni
Association found Mrs. Thomas, the Bradford teacher. Now 80 years old and nearly blind, she retired after 43
years of teaching and still lives in Lubbock. She graciously consented to talk to me on the telephone.
“Charles? Why, he was killed in a car wreck.” She remembered many of the
Bradford students she taught for 13 years, the hardships they endured together,
and their accomplishments in later years.
Land for the school was donated by a
white farmer who wanted to provide an education for the eight African-American
children of the Douglas family that worked for him, and the local school
district provided the building and discarded furniture. There were no improvements: “Water was in a tin barrel in the
corner and we had to use the outdoor toilets.”
Local farmers would stop by and give
her fresh peas and potatoes from their fields, and later on the school district
delivered lunches for her students.
“No child can learn when they’re hungry.”
The school district also provided
the bus that Mrs. Thomas drove each day to pick up her students, some of whom
were children of African-Americans stationed at the local Air Force base. “It was cold when we got there in the
winter and we all gathered around the butane stove to keep warm.”
She taught students from the first
through the eighth grade. “The
older children helped me with the younger ones. They only gave us
the old used text books after they got
new ones. The workbooks had
already been filled in, and I had to retype them at night for my students. We never got anything new.”
Official segregation did not end in
Texas until after passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Bradford School was closed, and
Mrs. Thomas was able to attend Texas Tech to obtain a Master’s degree. One of her professors asked her whether
she wanted to be called a “Black or Negro?” She told him she “preferred Mrs. Thomas or Marjorie.”
She became a counselor and worked
for another 30 years in the Lubbock schools. “After integration, it didn’t matter if you were white or
black, but I wanted to encourage black children to become anything they wanted
to be. They just had to work
harder than white children.”
“I told my students that if they
worked hard and studied they could become president. I always believed we would have a black president some day;
I just never thought I would live to see it.”
Mrs. Thomas was one of 10 children
raised on a small farm near Tyler in East Texas. Her mother was a maid in a private home, who only got to go
through the front door “when she had to sweep the porch.” Her father farmed all day and worked as
a custodian at the local bank at night.
Seven of their children finished college.
“It was the times. They
thought black people didn’t have good sense, but I always felt I’m a person and
I can do what anyone else can do.
I never let the color of my skin stop me. Whenever they gave
us an opportunity, we excelled.”
Mrs. Thomas said that she wasn’t
able to vote when she was young because she didn’t have three dollars to pay
the poll tax. “I didn’t feel it
was right because it kept poor people from voting.” Once she could afford it, “I always voted. In fact, I worked in the polls until I
couldn’t see well enough.”
She didn’t believe Obama had a
chance until after the Iowa primary, but then “I encouraged everybody I knew to
vote. I put an Obama sign in my
front yard. I’m keeping it for my
grandchildren. I voted for Obama,
and I felt so exuberant – so excited.”
She felt “overwhelmed” and cried
when Obama was declared the winner.
“It sent chills though my body.”
She said, “There was a time when black people couldn’t even see inside
the White House as a visitor, and now one of us is going to be living there.”
“I’ve seen so many changes in my
lifetime....”
The election of Barack Obama opens a
new chapter in American history.
For black people, racial discrimination no longer stands in the way of
opportunity, and their future success will be based on achievement rather than
the color of their skin. For white
people, who witnessed racial discrimination and remained silent, there is
liberation from their shared guilt.
There are no more excuses!
Whether or not President Obama can
save the nation remains to be seen.
However, he would never have had the chance to try, were it not for the
fundamental changes in American society brought about by pioneers such as Mrs.
Marjorie Thomas.